In this Monday, Aug.26, 2013 photograph, Sri Lankan policemen hold a pair of sniffer dogs as they hold a wedding ceremony of nine pairs of police dogs in Kandy, Sri Lanka. Sri Lanka police have apologized for holding a wedding ceremony for sniffer dogs after the country's culture minister condemned the event and demanded an investigation. The dogs dressed in shawls, hats and socks were placed on a decorated platform like those used in traditional weddings in the ceremony Monday, part of a breeding program. They were later driven away in a decorated police jeep for their "honeymoons." (AP Photo)

In this Monday, Aug.26, 2013 photograph, Sri Lankan policemen walk with sniffer dogs as they hold a wedding ceremony of nine pairs of police dogs in Kandy, Sri Lanka. Sri Lanka police have apologized for holding a wedding ceremony for sniffer dogs after the country's culture minister condemned the event and demanded an investigation. The dogs dressed in shawls, hats and socks were placed on a decorated platform like those used in traditional weddings in the ceremony Monday, part of a breeding program. They were later driven away in a decorated police jeep for their "honeymoons." (AP Photo)

Nine pairs of police dogs dressed in shawls, hats and socks were placed on a decorated platform like those used in traditional weddings in the ceremony Monday in the central town of Kandy.

Their marriages were registered by an official in the presence of a crowd of veterinary surgeons, medical doctors, top police officers and the public.

Local television showed the dog couples later being driven away in a decorated police jeep for their "honeymoons."

The ceremony received wide publicity, and strong criticism from cultural officials.

Culture and Arts Minister T.B. Ekananayake said the ceremony undermined traditional wedding rituals and should be strongly condemned. He called for an investigation.

Police spokesman Buddhika Siriwardena apologized for any damage to the country's cultural heritage, saying the goal was to breed sniffer dogs domestically.

"This program is aimed at breeding dogs accustomed to local weather and food, thereby saving money," Siriwardena said in a statement, adding that in 2011 the police department spent $500,000 importing such dogs from the Netherlands.

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